"Through the investigation Harris has made comments to family members regarding a life insurance policy that he has on Cooper and what they need to do in order to file for it," read one of the search warrant affidavits. The Cobb County magistrate's office released warrants last week and additional warrants to the Los Angeles Times on Saturday.

Harris’ court hearing Thursday and the warrants indicate the man has dual personalities: One is a churchgoing family man who called his son’s funeral in tears from jail. The other, according to authorities, is a man who desired a child-free life and who, as his son sat for hours in broiling heat, sexted six women.

Heard the response of mom, "he must have left him in the car" Who was asking him about life insurance in jail? What if, he really did not know the child was in the car because she put him in? Her response was so bizarre.

Harris had two life insurance policies on Cooper. Before his son's death, he had done online research about kids dying in hot cars, twice watching a video on the subject, according to police testimony given at a probable-cause hearing Thursday in Cobb County.

After the more than two-hour hearing, the judge found that prosecutors had presented enough evidence to deny Harris bond and try him for murder and second-degree child cruelty.

On the day of the incident, Harris had left Cooper in an SUV in the parking lot at Home Depot, where he worked, at 9:25 a.m. The temperature reached the upper 80s that day, police said.

Harris left work at 4:15 p.m., then brought his car to a screeching halt near a strip mall and pulled his son's body out of the car. He appeared to be in distress, according to witness testimony.

Nurse Nina Pham — once the upbeat face of the Dallas hospital that confronted the country’s first Ebola case — sued the hospital’s parent company Monday, alleging that it had failed to protect her before and after she was diagnosed with the deadly disease last fall.

With no political solution in sight, Congress faces another deadline to fund the Homeland Security Department by midnight Friday – a do-over of last week's bitter battle as Republicans try to stop President Obama's immigration plans.

Hours after Tamir Rice’s family angrily criticized Cleveland for contending in legal documents that the 12-year-old was to blame for his death at the hands of a police officer, the mayor apologized Monday and said the city would amend its court filing.